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Anastasiya Stepanova

Ural Federal University

Publishes on Glycosylation and Glycoproteins Research, Monoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research, Microfluidic and Capillary Electrophoresis Applications. 5 papers and 290 citations.

5Publications
290Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Microfluidic droplet platform for ultrahigh-throughput single-cell screening of biodiversity
Stanislav S. Terekhov, I. V. Smirnov, Anastasiya Stepanova et al.|Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences|2017
Cited by 230Open Access

Significance Biocompatible microfluidic double water-in-oil-in-water emulsion (MDE) enables in-droplet cultivation of different living species. The combination of droplet-generating machinery with FACS followed by next-generation sequencing and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of the secretomes of encapsulated organisms yielded detailed genotype/phenotype descriptions. The MDE–FACS platform we developed enabled highly sensitive single-cell selection of predesigned activity and exploration of pairwise interactions between target and effector cells without interference from other microbiota species.

Role of κ→λ light-chain constant-domain switch in the structure and functionality of A17 reactibody
Н. А. Пономаренко, S.D. Chatziefthimiou, I. N. Kurkova et al.|Acta Crystallographica Section D Biological Crystallography|2014
Cited by 25Open Access

The engineering of catalytic function in antibodies requires precise information on their structure. Here, results are presented that show how the antibody domain structure affects its functionality. The previously designed organophosphate-metabolizing reactibody A17 has been re-engineered by replacing its constant κ light chain by the λ chain (A17λ), and the X-ray structure of A17λ has been determined at 1.95 Å resolution. It was found that compared with A17κ the active centre of A17λ is displaced, stabilized and made more rigid owing to interdomain interactions involving the CDR loops from the VL and VH domains. These VL/VH domains also have lower mobility, as deduced from the atomic displacement parameters of the crystal structure. The antibody elbow angle is decreased to 126° compared with 138° in A17κ. These structural differences account for the subtle changes in catalytic efficiency and thermodynamic parameters determined with two organophosphate ligands, as well as in the affinity for peptide substrates selected from a combinatorial cyclic peptide library, between the A17κ and A17λ variants. The data presented will be of interest and relevance to researchers dealing with the design of antibodies with tailor-made functions.

Robotic QM/MM-driven maturation of antibody combining sites
Cited by 21Open Access

In vitro selection of antibodies from large repertoires of immunoglobulin (Ig) combining sites using combinatorial libraries is a powerful tool, with great potential for generating in vivo scavengers for toxins. However, addition of a maturation function is necessary to enable these selected antibodies to more closely mimic the full mammalian immune response. We approached this goal using quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) calculations to achieve maturation in silico. We preselected A17, an Ig template, from a naïve library for its ability to disarm a toxic pesticide related to organophosphorus nerve agents. Virtual screening of 167,538 robotically generated mutants identified an optimum single point mutation, which experimentally boosted wild-type Ig scavenger performance by 170-fold. We validated the QM/MM predictions via kinetic analysis and crystal structures of mutant apo-A17 and covalently modified Ig, thereby identifying the displacement of one water molecule by an arginine as delivering this catalysis.

QM/MM Description of Newly Selected Catalytic Bioscavengers Against Organophosphorus Compounds Revealed Reactivation Stimulus Mediated by Histidine Residue in the Acyl-Binding Loop
Alexander Zlobin, Yuliana A. Mokrushina, Stanislav S. Terekhov et al.|Frontiers in Pharmacology|2018
Cited by 13Open Access

Butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) is considered as an efficient stoichiometric antidote against organophosphorus (OP) poisons. Recently we utilized combination of calculations and ultrahigh-throughput screening (uHTS) to select BChE variants capable of catalytic destruction of OP pesticide paraoxon. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the molecular mechanism underlying enzymatic hydrolysis of paraoxon by BChE variants using hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) calculations. Detailed analysis of accomplished QM/MM runs revealed that histidine residues introduced into the acyl-binding loop are always located in close proximity with aspartate residue at position 70. Histidine residue acts as general base thus leading to attacking water molecule activation and subsequent SN2 inline hydrolysis resulting in BChE reactivation. This combination resembles canonical catalytic triad found in active centers of various proteases. Carboxyl group activates histidine residue by altering its pKa, which in turn promotes the activation of water molecule in terms of its nucleophilicity. Observed re-protonation of catalytic serine residue at position 198 from histidine residue at position 438 recovers initial configuration of the enzyme’s active center, facilitating next catalytic cycle. We therefore suggest that utilization of uHTS platform in combination with deciphering of molecular mechanisms by QM/MM calculations may significantly improve our knowledge of enzyme function, propose new strategies for enzyme design and open new horizons in generation of catalytic bioscavengers against OP poisons.

UNIVERSAL COMPETENCIES IN RUSSIAN UNIVERSITIES
Yuliya Koreshnikova, Ivan Zamoschanskiy, Anna Zamoschanskaya et al.|Aegitas publishing house eBooks|2023
Cited by 1

In 2022, Russia established the "Consortium of Higher Education Institutions for the Development of Universal Competencies", which includes the National Research University Higher School of Economics (NRU HSE), ITMO University, Ural Federal University named after the First President of Russia B.N. Yeltsin (UrFU), National Research Tomsk State University (NR TSU) and Tyumen State University (TyumSU). These universities have the most advanced programs for the development of universal competencies (soft skills) in students, as well as research in this area. The universities are joining forces to offer programs on skills development, measurement and assessment for Russian higher education. This book includes descriptions of the universal competence development and assessment systems of the Consortium member universities: the history and structure of the programs, best practices of formation and assessment. This book will be of interest to administrators and faculty who recognize the importance of the role of the modern university in preparing competitive graduates.